kathleenmariekg
Active Member
How often is Baptist theology labeled as "folk theology" at "non denominational" and Ivy League seminaries?
Surviving and Thriving in Seminary by H. Daniel Zacharias and Benjamin K. Forrest
GET READY FOR DISCOMFORT
But now you are listening to professors discuss the same subjects in ways you’ve never heard before. It is jarring and often confusing. Students sometimes rebel, questioning the faith of their professors or wonder why they need to learn “all this new extraneous stuff.” If you are tempted to resist new ideas, remind yourself that wisdom and knowledge come from being exposed to and thinking through new ideas--not by refusing to listen or enter into dialogue.
...
Seminary will ask you to take a step back and look critically at what you believe--not because your professors want to destroy your beliefs, but because they want you to think about whether they are the best way to understand the world, and whether they truly are in line with the Scriptures and not just a folk theology.1
Who Needs Theology?: An Invitation to the Study of God by Grenz, Stanley J.Olson, Roger E.
FOLK THEOLOGY
Theologies, then, lie along a spectrum of reflection. At one extreme end is what we will call “folk theology,” while at the other end lies its opposite, “academic theology.” Between these lie various levels of theology—some less and some more reflective in their approaches to understanding Christian faith. Closer to the center of the spectrum than folk theology is lay theology, and closer yet is ministerial theology. Moving on toward the other end of the spectrum we find professional theology, and finally—at the opposite extremity from folk theology—lies academic theology:
...
What is folk theology? We will use the term to describe unreflective believing based on blind faith in a tradition of some kind. We are not using this label to criticize the simple faith of saints of God who have never been tutored in formal theology. We know some genuine saints who have lived out the Christian life in profound ways yet are not very good at articulating or critically reflecting on their beliefs. Rather, we use the term folk theology to refer to a kind of theology that rejects critical reflection and enthusiastically embraces simplistic acceptance of an informal tradition of beliefs and practices composed mainly of clichés and legends.
Folk theology is found in every denomination and very commonly among people who consider themselves Christians (or at least believers in God) but have no denominational or church affiliation. For the most part, folk theology completely rejects reflection in the sphere of religion. Deep spiritual piety and intellectual reflection are considered antithetical to one another within folk theology.
...
It stunts growth and blunts the influence of Christianity in the world. Further, it is often difficult to distinguish Christian folk theology from the canned answers and pasted smiles that cultists display on the doorstep as they peddle their “new revelations” from door to door.
...
Folk theology, then, is unreflective belief that revels in subjective feelings brought on by slogans or legends and that resists examination. Generally speaking, it is quite comfortable with inner inconsistency and unquestioning belief in sensational stories and pithy clichés, which are the primary media for its communication.
...
we do acknowledge that lay, ministerial and professional theologians can learn about the yearnings of people’s hearts from studying it. The legends and clichés on which folk theology thrives reveal the spiritual needs, questions and desires of the masses. These should not be ignored, but rather drawn upon to show the resources of reflective faith for meeting and answering them.
Surviving and Thriving in Seminary by H. Daniel Zacharias and Benjamin K. Forrest
GET READY FOR DISCOMFORT
But now you are listening to professors discuss the same subjects in ways you’ve never heard before. It is jarring and often confusing. Students sometimes rebel, questioning the faith of their professors or wonder why they need to learn “all this new extraneous stuff.” If you are tempted to resist new ideas, remind yourself that wisdom and knowledge come from being exposed to and thinking through new ideas--not by refusing to listen or enter into dialogue.
...
Seminary will ask you to take a step back and look critically at what you believe--not because your professors want to destroy your beliefs, but because they want you to think about whether they are the best way to understand the world, and whether they truly are in line with the Scriptures and not just a folk theology.1
Who Needs Theology?: An Invitation to the Study of God by Grenz, Stanley J.Olson, Roger E.
FOLK THEOLOGY
Theologies, then, lie along a spectrum of reflection. At one extreme end is what we will call “folk theology,” while at the other end lies its opposite, “academic theology.” Between these lie various levels of theology—some less and some more reflective in their approaches to understanding Christian faith. Closer to the center of the spectrum than folk theology is lay theology, and closer yet is ministerial theology. Moving on toward the other end of the spectrum we find professional theology, and finally—at the opposite extremity from folk theology—lies academic theology:
...
What is folk theology? We will use the term to describe unreflective believing based on blind faith in a tradition of some kind. We are not using this label to criticize the simple faith of saints of God who have never been tutored in formal theology. We know some genuine saints who have lived out the Christian life in profound ways yet are not very good at articulating or critically reflecting on their beliefs. Rather, we use the term folk theology to refer to a kind of theology that rejects critical reflection and enthusiastically embraces simplistic acceptance of an informal tradition of beliefs and practices composed mainly of clichés and legends.
Folk theology is found in every denomination and very commonly among people who consider themselves Christians (or at least believers in God) but have no denominational or church affiliation. For the most part, folk theology completely rejects reflection in the sphere of religion. Deep spiritual piety and intellectual reflection are considered antithetical to one another within folk theology.
...
It stunts growth and blunts the influence of Christianity in the world. Further, it is often difficult to distinguish Christian folk theology from the canned answers and pasted smiles that cultists display on the doorstep as they peddle their “new revelations” from door to door.
...
Folk theology, then, is unreflective belief that revels in subjective feelings brought on by slogans or legends and that resists examination. Generally speaking, it is quite comfortable with inner inconsistency and unquestioning belief in sensational stories and pithy clichés, which are the primary media for its communication.
...
we do acknowledge that lay, ministerial and professional theologians can learn about the yearnings of people’s hearts from studying it. The legends and clichés on which folk theology thrives reveal the spiritual needs, questions and desires of the masses. These should not be ignored, but rather drawn upon to show the resources of reflective faith for meeting and answering them.